Apple Sauce
Equipment
- Food mill
- Canning jars (only use real canning jars, such as Ball or Kerr; others are likely to break) plus lids and bands
- Canner or simlar large pot, plus canning rack or other spacer
Ingredients
- good eating apples, such as Zestar, Honey Crisp, or Braeburn
Instructions
Prepare and cook apples
- Wash and quarter apples. There is no need to peel the apples, remove their stems, or core them.
- Put cut apples into pot large enough to hold all the apples with a little room to spare.
- Put pot on stove, on low heat, and cook apples until they are soft. Stir occasionally so that apples do not burn to bottom of pot. There is no need to add any extra water.
- If time permits, cool cooked apples in refrigerator overnight.
Process apples using food mill
- Ladle apples and cooking liquid into top of food mill.
- Run food mill. Apple sauce should come out of one part of the mill, and peels, seeds, stems, and the like from another part of the mill.
Can apples
- Wash jars and place in a canner or pot large enough to hold the jars plus at least one inch of water. Put a rack or spacer in the canner between the bottom of the canner and the jars, so the jars do not sit directly on the bottom of the canner.
- Fill pot with water, place on burner, and bring to a boil.
- Place lids and bands in small pot, cover with water, place on burner, and bring to a simmer.
- Meanwhile, bring apple sauce to a boil and then let simmer.
- Once sauce is simmering and the water containing the jars is boiling, begin filling jars. Fill jars one at a time.
- Fill jar, leaving approx. ¼ inch headspace.
- Remove air bubbles by sliding nonmetallic spatula between jar and food, repeating around circumference of jar. If necessary, readjust headroom.
- Wipe rim and threads of jar clean with damp cloth to remove any food residue.
- Place lid on jar with sealing compound net to rim, and then screw on hand until finger tight.
- Remove enough water from the canner to allow for the jar to be placed in the pot without water spilling out of the canner, then place the jar in the canner, on the rack if you are using one else on the spacer.
- Repeat for each jar.
- When all jars are in the canner full, make sure that the water covers the jars by at least on inch. If it does not, add boiling water.
- Place lid on canner and turn heat to medium high.
- Bring to boil and process (let boil) for at least ½ hour (at or slightly above sea level).
- When time has elapsed, turn off heat and remove canner lid. Once boiling subsides, remove jars without tilting and place them upright on a towel to cool in a draft-free place. Do not retighten bands or test for a seal while jars are hot.
- Cool jars undisturbed for 24 hours.
- After jars have cooled, check lids for seal by pressing on the center of the lid. If the lid is pulled down and does not flex up of down when pressed, remove the band and slightly lift the jar by the lid. Lids that do not flex and cannot easily be removed with your fingertips have a good seal. Any jars that do not have a good seal should be reprocessed or refrigerated.
- Label jars and store in cool, dry, dark place.
Notes
About 10 pounds of apples should make about 3 1/2 to 4 quarts of apple sauce.
Canning instructions adapted from homecanning.com.